Is the Mantle-Crust Transition in the Finero Complex (southern Alps) a Fossil Continental Moho?
Abstract
The geophysical studies indicate that the mantle-continental crust discontinuity is usually the site of complex intercalations of rocks having different physical and chemical properties. The possibility to directly characterize such rocks is extremely limited, because very few fossil continental Moho discontinuities crop out: in addition, most of them are considered to be representative of island arc environments. To address this issue, a comprehensive investigation has been carried out in the Finero Complex (Ivrea-Verbano Zone; Southern Alps), where the Phlogopite Peridotite (PP) mantle unit is surrounded by mafic-ultramafic rocks interpreted as intrusive crustal bodies. The crustal unit placed in contact with the PP is the Layered Internal Zone (LIZ), which is overlaid by the Amphibole Peridotite unit. At the contact with LIZ, the typical phlogopite-amphibole-harzburgite forming the PP unit is replaced by a weakly-deformed amphibole-biotite-bearing orthopyroxenite layer. Orthopyroxenite amphibole shows the typical LILE and LREE enrichments and the HFSE and HREE depletion observed in the rest of the mantle unit. This suggests that orthopyroxenite was segregated during the pervasive metasomatic event characterising the PP unit. The LIZ is formed by hornblendites, amphibole-garnet gabbros, pyroxenites and garnet hornblendites. The Amphibole Peridotite unit consists of peridotites, hornblendites and pyroxenites. In the LIZ, the melt intrusion locally involved the assimilation of early gabbroic cumulates, and the segregation of garnet hornblendites by substitution of pyroxenites. In the Amphibole Peridotite, late porous-flow melt migration produced secondary recrystallisation fronts, associated to the development of trace element gradients due to ion-exchange processes. Our observations suggest that the transition between PP and LIZ is primary. The LIZ and Amphibole Peridotite units record multiple events of migration of melt, whose composition varied from LREE-depleted to extremely LREE-enriched. The large variety of rocks, geochemical signatures and petrologic processes recorded by the studied mantle-crust transition evidences as it worked for a very long time as a primary lithospheric discontinuity, representing a preferential level of channelling for the uprising melts.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.V23D0505Z
- Keywords:
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- 1099 General or miscellaneous;
- GEOCHEMISTRY;
- 3699 General or miscellaneous;
- MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY;
- 8499 General or miscellaneous;
- VOLCANOLOGY